Etymologies

Examples

Committee of F.fty, published by Houghton, Mifflin Co, under the general title, Aspects of the Liquor Problem; a summary of these conclusions is published with the title The Liquor Problem, ed.F. J. Peabody.

Put bluntly, Justice O’Connor’s use of legislative history in 324 Liquor is a “how-to” lesson in the misuse of legislative history — exactly the sort of sloppy cherry-picking that discredits the use of legislative history generally.

Oats malted as Barley is, will make a weak, soft, mellow and pleasant Drink, but Wheat when done so, will produce a strong heady nourishing well-tasted and fine Liquor, which is now more practised then ever.

And we may observe this departure of the subtiler and stronger Spirits, out of the harder and grosser parts of the Body, into the more soft and tenuious, in a certain Spirituous Liquor, which is congealed with great cold, where the stronger